View Message

Pélagie
This was the name of one of my great-grandmothers. She was my dad's paternal grandmother, and she died when I was 10. (She lived to the ripe old age of 104.) I always thought she had a very cool name - it's a very unusual name here in France, also really old-fashioned, but I like it. According to my grandfather, she was named after a relative. (The relative got it from Saint Pelagia.)I also like the Greek and Polish form Pelagia and the Russian form Pelageya.(The most famous bearer of the name is probably the Marquis de Sade's wife, Renée-Pélagie de Montreuil. I only found out her name last month. There's also a novel by a French-Canadian writer called Pélagie: The Return to Acadie, about a woman named Pélagie who tries to return to Acadia from New Orleans after the French and Indian War.)

This message was edited 5/4/2014, 4:46 AM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

It's pretty. I like it. Many names starting with P are kind of harsh-sounding (including Pelagia), but Pélagie has a pleasant softness to its sound.
vote up1
It's pretty and I like the sea connection. I'd use it if it were in my family tree.

This message was edited 5/4/2014, 11:29 AM

vote up1
I think of all the forms of Pelagius, Pélagie is definitely the prettiest and, imo, the most usable. I don't actually much like the other forms of Pelagia, but I do kinda like Pélagie... maybe cause it's softer? I dunno. It's cute though. I like a lot of French names tbh, they just tend to sound more pleasant to my ears and look prettier.
vote up1
I love it! Pelagia is the form of the name with which I'm familiar, and I love it as well.
vote up1
Yes! "Pelagie-la- Charette"!Well known in my area,(I live in a French-speaking part of Canada.)
vote up1